The perfect couple myth
Meera and Sanjay never fought. Not once in three years of marriage. Their families praised them as the "perfect couple." Friends were envious. "You're so lucky," everyone said. "You never have problems."
Except they did have problems. Meera was frustrated that Sanjay spent every Sunday with his parents instead of her. Sanjay felt controlled by Meera's constant questions about his spending. Neither said anything. Because good couples don't fight, right?
Wrong. When Meera finally exploded one night—three years of suppressed resentment pouring out in one devastating argument—Sanjay didn't even know what hit him. "Where is this coming from?" he asked, genuinely confused.
It was coming from everywhere. From every swallowed frustration, every silent compromise, and every time Meera chose "keeping peace" over speaking her truth. Here is the thing: couples who never fight aren't necessarily happy couples. They are often ticking time bombs.

The myth that good couples don't fight
We grow up watching Bollywood movies where the perfect romance is seamless, or we see our parents maintaining a polite silence to keep the household running. We start believing that conflict is a sign of failure. If we are fighting, something must be wrong with us.
But silence isn't always peace. Sometimes, silence is just distance. When you avoid conflict to keep the peace, you start a war inside yourself. You stop sharing your true feelings, and slowly, you stop being authentic with your partner. You become roommates who are polite to each other rather than partners who are real with each other.
True intimacy requires vulnerability, and vulnerability often leads to friction. That friction isn't a bug in the system; it is a feature. It shows that two distinct individuals are trying to build a life together without losing themselves in the process.
Why conflict can be healthy
Believe it or not, fighting can be good for you. It means you care enough to want things to be better. It means you feel safe enough to express dissatisfaction. Research backs this up heavily.
According to the Gottman Institute, couples who develop effective conflict resolution skills are 31% less likely to divorce than those who avoid conflict entirely. Why? Because conflict clears the air. It brings hidden issues to the surface where they can be addressed.
When you navigate a disagreement successfully, you understand your partner better. You learn their boundaries, their values, and their fears. You can understand why silent resentment builds when these things are ignored. Conflict is the tunnel you have to walk through to get to deeper intimacy.
Think of conflict as a stress test for your relationship. Every time you resolve an issue, you reinforce the foundation of your bond. You prove to yourselves that your relationship is strong enough to handle difficult emotions and come out the other side intact.
Productive vs. destructive conflict
Now, this doesn't mean you should start screaming at each other over wet towels. There is a massive difference between a healthy disagreement and a toxic fight. It's not about if you fight, but how you fight.
Productive conflict attacks the problem. Destructive conflict attacks the person. The Gottman Institute identifies "The Four Horsemen" of destructive conflict: Criticism, Contempt, Defensiveness, and Stonewalling. If you are rolling your eyes, calling names, or giving the silent treatment, that's not healthy conflict—that's relationship poison.
You need to learn to distinguish healthy disagreements from toxic fights to ensure your arguments lead to solutions rather than scars. Healthy conflict feels like "us against the problem," not "me against you." In a productive argument, you might feel angry, but you never feel unsafe or despised.
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Why Indian couples avoid conflict
In the Indian context, avoiding conflict is almost a survival skill we learn from childhood. We are taught to "adjust" and "compromise" constantly. In joint families or tight-knit communities, a loud argument isn't just between two people; it's a disruption to the whole house.
We worry about what the elders will think or if the neighbors will hear. We are terrified of being seen as "difficult" or "disrespectful." So, we suppress. We smile when we are angry. We say "it's fine" when it's absolutely not fine. This cultural pressure to maintain outward harmony often leads to inward chaos.
This avoidance creates a unique dynamic where couples communicate through passive-aggression rather than direct conversation. Instead of saying "I'm hurt you didn't defend me," we might give the silent treatment or make sarcastic comments about dinner. Breaking this cycle requires realizing that your relationship's health is more important than the appearance of harmony.
Fighting fair: Rules of engagement
If you are going to fight, you need ground rules. Think of it as a sport—you can play hard, but you can't foul. Establishing these rules when you are calm makes it easier to stick to them when emotions run high.
- No character assassinations: Say "I feel frustrated when the dishes aren't done" instead of "You are lazy and irresponsible." Labeling your partner creates defensiveness instantly.
- Stick to one topic: Don't bring up that mistake from 2019 just because you are mad about today's dinner. This is called "kitchen-sinking," and it ensures nothing gets resolved.
- Take timeouts: If your heart rate is spiking and you want to say something mean, take a 20-minute break. Come back when you are calm. This isn't avoiding the fight; it's managing your physiology.
- Listen to understand, not to reply: Most of us are just waiting for our turn to speak. Stop and actually listen. Reflect back what you heard to ensure you understood correctly.
Remember, 69% of relationship problems are perpetual and will never be fully resolved. You aren't trying to "win" or fix everything forever; you are trying to understand each other's perspective and find a way to live with your differences.

Using understanding to prevent unnecessary conflicts
A lot of fights happen simply because we assume we know what our partner is thinking. We assume they spent that money to annoy us, or they ignored our text because they don't care. Usually, we are wrong. We project our own insecurities onto their actions.
This is where understanding your partner's "vibe" comes in handy. If you know your partner values financial security above all else, you won't take their budget questions as a personal attack. If you know they need alone time to recharge, you won't feel rejected when they want a quiet Sunday.
Tools like BaeDrop's relationship quizzes can help you discover these surprising things about each other in a fun, low-pressure way. Knowing these baseline preferences acts as a buffer against misunderstanding.
You can discover why couples actually fight by looking at these underlying differences. By proactively learning about each other's views on money, family, and lifestyle, you can prevent the fights that are born from simple misunderstandings.
Conclusion
Conflict isn't the villain in your love story. It's a plot twist that helps the characters grow. Don't aim for a relationship where you never fight. Aim for a relationship where you fight fair, repair quickly, and love each other enough to have the difficult conversations.
Silence might look like peace, but honest communication feels like love. Choose the real thing. The strongest couples aren't the ones who never disagree; they are the ones who disagree, repair, and come back together stronger than before.
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